To:
Congress

Re-Open California Social Security Offices!

The American people own our Social Security system, including the offices in our neighborhoods, nobody has the right to close our local offices. Re-open Social Security offices in California!

Why is this important?

Our Social Security system has been under attack for decades. Since 2010, some members of Congress have been so intent on cutting your earned benefits that they’ve held hostage our nations’ credit, threatened to shut down the government, and forced Congress through a nauseating series of crises. Finally, cries to cut benefits have grown quieter as the program’s enemies realize that the American people will work together to beat back anything they throw at us.

But benefit cuts aren’t the only way to dismantle our Social Security system.

There is already an invisible war under way—and we’re losing!

The Social Security Administration is funded the same way Social Security benefits are—by payroll taxes that all of us pay. Its expenses have no impact on the federal debt, and represent less than 1% of Social Security’s annual expenditures. But Congress has still cut fourteen of the last sixteen SSA budget requests! And now, these cuts are being felt, as the Social Security Administration is forced to shutter dozens of field offices around the country.

That's why we're launching this petition telling Congress: Reopen the three field offices in Barstow, Redlands and Corona, California that were already closed in 2014.

RJ Eskow wrote on the Huffington Post that “many disabled and elderly Social Security recipients depend on field offices, and the workers in them.” And as Michael Hiltzik of the Los Angeles Times said “They haven’t been able to cut benefits, so they’re doing the next best thing: making it hard for you to know what you’re due, and harder to get it when it comes due.”

The bottom line is, Americans came together to create the Social Security system to provide a basic, reliable foundation for retirement and disability.

Closing field offices and making it more difficult to access benefits information is an attempt to dismantle that foundation. It’s time to stop it.